
After My Mate Deceived Me, I Fled
Chapter 2
The cold metal of the restraints bit into my wrists and ankles as the mind-link extraction continued. Through the haze of pain, memories flooded to the surface, projected for all to see. Not just recent events, but older wounds—deeper truths I'd buried beneath years of desperate longing for acceptance.
I was twelve again, standing at the threshold of Silver Moon Pack territory. The dawn light cast long shadows across the stone steps leading to the packhouse. My clothes—donated by human shelters—hung loose on my thin frame. Nine years of captivity had left me a stranger to my own kind.
"State your business," growled the guard, a burly Delta whose scent carried no recognition of mine.
"I'm Melissa James," I whispered, the name feeling foreign on my tongue after years of answering to whatever my captors called me. "Alpha Marcus's daughter."
The guard's eyes narrowed with suspicion. "Alpha's daughter was taken by rogues. Presumed dead."
"I escaped," I said, my voice small. "Please, I just want to go home."
He stepped closer, inhaling deeply. Something in my scent must have triggered doubt because he backed away, his expression hardening. "Wait here."
Hours passed. The morning chill gave way to midday heat, then back to evening's cool embrace. No one came. No one welcomed the lost child home. I curled into myself on the cold stone steps, fingers clutching the only thing that had kept me sane during my captivity—my grandmother's moonstone pendant. The smooth stone pulsed with faint warmth against my palm, a reminder of a heritage I barely remembered.
"This will protect you when I cannot," Grandmother had whispered the night before I was taken. Now it was all I had left of her—of any family.
Night fell. Hunger gnawed at my stomach. Exhaustion pulled at my limbs. Still, no one came. The pack had moved on without me. Perhaps they preferred the memory of a lost child to the reality of a damaged one.
I must have dozed off because suddenly there were footsteps, then a sharp intake of breath. I looked up through tangled hair to see a teenage boy staring down at me, his features a blur through my tears.
"Moon Goddess," he whispered, dropping to his knees. "Melissa?"
I nodded, too tired to speak.
"I'm Nathan," he said, his voice breaking. "Your brother."
Brother. The word echoed in my mind, foreign yet familiar. I had a brother. Someone who remembered me.
Without hesitation, he unwrapped his Beta cloak—a symbol of his rank and status—and draped it around my shoulders. The fabric carried his scent, warm and protective, the first kindness I'd felt in years.
"Why didn't they let me in?" I asked, my voice small.
Nathan's jaw tightened. "They're fools," he said simply. Then, with a gentleness that made my heart ache, he helped me to my feet. "I will protect you, always. No matter what happens, remember that."
I believed him then. I believed him through years of sidelong glances from pack members, through my mother's cold distance, through my father's formal acknowledgments that never quite reached his eyes.
Years passed in the memory stream. I grew from a frightened child into a young woman, always on the periphery of pack life, never quite belonging. Until that night under the silver moon.
The annual Moon Festival. Silver lanterns hung from ancient oaks, casting ethereal light across the clearing. I stood alone, as always, watching others dance and laugh. My wolf, Lyra, restless beneath my skin, urged me toward the forest edge. Away from the celebration. Away from the reminder of my outsider status.
That's when I caught it—a scent that made Lyra howl with recognition. Cedar and rain and something uniquely male. I turned, and there he was. Ethan Stone. The future Alpha of our neighboring pack, tall and powerful, his eyes finding mine across the clearing.
The world fell away as he approached. My heart thundered in my chest. Jasmine and moonlight—my scent—wrapped around him as he drew closer, just as his cedar embraced me.
"Mate," he whispered, the word reverent on his lips.
"Mate," I echoed, feeling for the first time that I belonged somewhere—to someone.
Lyra purred deep in my mind, a sound of contentment I'd never heard from her before. His wolf responded in kind, a rumble that vibrated between us.
In that moment, I believed all my loneliness had ended. I had found my place. My person. My future.
How wrong I was.
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